The season will start even sooner then last year, give it maybe three weeks?

We tried to ski the west side of Palisades last year mid April, absolutely no snow. Climbed Carl Heller on May 18, no snow at and around Wallace Lake and its basin.

Contrary to some claims, there is little likelihood of considerable precipitation in April and May...So by mid May, the season should be in full force ( with just a bit of snow here and there). By mid July, the snow slopes will turn to ice, at least if the gullies and snow slopes did not burn out completely by then. Get ready...

Can't wait for the Chief to tell you how it will average out...according to him this was supposed to be a heavy snow year. Proves my point- no one can predict how heavy/light next winter will be....even the Chief.

asmrz wrote:The season will start even sooner then last year, give it maybe three weeks?

We tried to ski the west side of Palisades last year mid April, absolutely no snow. Climbed Carl Heller on May 18, no snow at and around Wallace Lake and its basin.

Contrary to some claims, there is little likelihood of considerable precipitation in April and May...So by mid May, the season should be in full force ( with just a bit of snow here and there). By mid July, the snow slopes will turn to ice, at least if the gullies and snow slopes did not burn out completely by then. Get ready...

It seemed like the window for alpine ice was tiny/none last year. It's also possible my timing is just terrible, I know a couple guys had a nice run up Clydes Couloir. Fingers crossed for this year.

Vitalyi, anecdotal evidence suggests these Sierra weather cycles run in (at least) three years in a row. Since others can predict, so can I (can I?)...Next year will be drier than normal as well...Burchey, if you must have ice, go in mid to late July and to places which rarely burn out. There will be nothing left in August...

asmrz wrote:The season will start even sooner then last year, give it maybe three weeks?

We tried to ski the west side of Palisades last year mid April, absolutely no snow. Climbed Carl Heller on May 18, no snow at and around Wallace Lake and its basin.

Contrary to some claims, there is little likelihood of considerable precipitation in April and May...So by mid May, the season should be in full force ( with just a bit of snow here and there). By mid July, the snow slopes will turn to ice, at least if the gullies and snow slopes did not burn out completely by then. Get ready...

It seemed like the window for alpine ice was tiny/none last year. It's also possible my timing is just terrible, I know a couple guys had a nice run up Clydes Couloir. Fingers crossed for this year.

Clyde couloir when they did it, was not alpine ice. Those are water ice pitches that form up there through that rock band in early summer/late spring (we should go do it this year!).

For alpine ice in couloirs to form doesn't it need to be cold at night etc (so it usually would form in autumn regardless)? The ice in North Peak couloirs was never fully in last year. Just patches of ice here and there and neve all the way. I climbed Mendel right when it was 'in" during spring time, just because the snow did not cover the ice from prior fall (2011) during that winter (not because the ice formed in spring) And by end of summer 2012 Mendel couloirs were gone!...U notch V notch feather couloir etc was not in. By "in" I am talking about blue ice. Don't consider neve or small patches as 'in.'

Vitaliy M. wrote:Clyde couloir when they did it, was not alpine ice. Those are water ice pitches that form up there through that rock band in early summer/late spring (we should go do it this year!).

For alpine ice in couloirs to form doesn't it need to be cold at night etc (so it usually would form in autumn regardless)? The ice in North Peak couloirs was never fully in last year. Just patches of ice here and there and neve all the way. I climbed Mendel right when it was 'in" during spring time, just because the snow did not cover the ice from prior fall (2011) during that winter (not because the ice formed in spring) And by end of summer 2012 Mendel couloirs were gone!...U notch V notch feather couloir etc was not in. By "in" I am talking about blue ice. Don't consider neve or small patches as 'in.'

If memory serves, they got on Clyde right at the end of June or very first part of July. There was a lot of blue in the V-notch in mid July when we went up, and we were heading for the U when massive rockfall in Clyde at 4am scared us off as we were flaking the ropes for the U. Not too long after that attempt, the U became a nasty mess of rock and dirt.

Hard to tell in this pic, but in the sun you could make out a few long pitches of blue on the V. early/mid July 2012

asmrz wrote:The season will start even sooner then last year, give it maybe three weeks?

We tried to ski the west side of Palisades last year mid April, absolutely no snow. Climbed Carl Heller on May 18, no snow at and around Wallace Lake and its basin.

Contrary to some claims, there is little likelihood of considerable precipitation in April and May...So by mid May, the season should be in full force ( with just a bit of snow here and there). By mid July, the snow slopes will turn to ice, at least if the gullies and snow slopes did not burn out completely by then. Get ready...

I would be cool with hitting the trails by mid May! Gotta do my 10 trips again this year.

Can't believe I bough skis last year. Have not really had great conditions to learn yet. Aside from a trip up Shasta and a few times at the resort they see no action At least I been rock climbing a lot. First world problems....

Yes, we climbed the Clyde on Jun2 last year. The bottom half is AI, but Vitaliy is right that the crux (fun) pitch is WI. That section does melt out late season, and forms early season when night temps are low and the snowfield above feeds it with melt (and also hopefully keeps rockfall in check).

Don't know what the weather has in store from now on, but I'd try to get on it in May or even Apr. PaliCam anyone?

Very aesthetic climb. Rockfall possibility is thought provoking. We rappeled the couloir, but I'd be happier rappeling Starlight Buttress. If anyone dials that, post up. The route down wasn't obvious from the top.

:::DOWNTOWN SAN FRANCISCO HAS HAD ITS DRIEST JANUARY-MARCH PERIOD ON RECORD. FROM JANUARY 1 THROUGH MARCH 31...DOWNTOWN SAN FRANCISCO ACCUMULATED 2.31 INCHES OF PRECIPITATION...ONLY 19 PERCENT OF THE AVERAGE. AVERAGE RAINFALL IN SAN FRANCISCO FOR THE FIRST THREE MONTHS OF THE YEAR IS 12.22 INCHES. THIS WAS THE DRIEST JANUARY-MARCH PERIOD IN SAN FRANCISCO SINCE RAINFALL RECORDS BEGAN IN THE CITY BACK IN 1850. THE PREVIOUS RECORD WAS 3.20 INCHES SET ALL THE WAY BACK IN 1851.